Landscape change in the Nile Delta during the fourth millennium BC: A new perspective on the Egyptian Predynastic and Protodynastic periods
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31118Date
2021-01-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The role environmental change may have played at the dawn of Egyptian history has been overlooked in comparison with other periods. Natural landscape changes taking place in the Nile Delta are argued here to have been a facilitating factor allowing, and possibly stimulating, socioeconomic changes leading to the ‘Lower Egyptian – Naqada Transition’ (LE-NT, c. 3350 BC). In this context, the LE-NT may be understood in terms of regional elites using newly agrarian delta lands as an agricultural resource and trade route, with the emerging capital, Memphis, ideally situated. We argue (almost counter-intuitively) that a natural reduction in overall landscape productivity led to agricultural intensification through a positive feedback loop. This may have laid the foundations for the emergence of a more unified Egyptian state beginning c. 3100 BC. Through this analysis, we argue for the incorporation of the environment as an integral component of change narratives of Predynastic Egypt.
Description
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in World Archaeology on 21.01.2021, available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2020.1864463.
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Taylor & FrancisCitation
Pennington, B.T., Wilson, P., Sturt F. & Brown, A.G. (2020). Landscape change in the Nile Delta during the fourth millennium BC: a new perspective on the Egyptian Predynastic and Protodynastic periods. World Archaeology, 52(4), 550-565.Metadata
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